The American Football League (AFL) was a professional league of American football that operated from 1960 to 1969. In 1970 the AFL merged operations with the National Football League. All ten AFL franchises became part of the merged league, which retained the NFL name.
Note: There were three earlier and unrelated American football leagues of the same name: One in 1926, one in 1936-1937 and one in 1940-1941. They are listed at the end of this article.
Hunt began his quest for a new league by contacting others who had shown interest in the Cardinals, and assessing their interest in starting a new league. These included K.S. (Bud) Adams of Houston, Bob Howsam of Denver and Max Winter and Bill Boyer of Minneapolis. This brought to four the number of potential teams in the new league.
Next, Hunt sought franchises in Los Angeles and New York City. But at the same time he sought the blessings of the NFL for his nascent league, as he did not seek a rivalry with the older and more established league. "I told myself I didn’t want to go into this if it meant some kind of battle," Hunt would later recall. "Of course, this was one of the more naive thoughts in the history of pro sports." *
Soon after, Hunt received commitments from Barron Hilton (Los Angeles) and Harry Wismer (New York). On August 14, 1959 the first league meeting was held in Chicago and charter teams were given to Dallas, New York, Houston, Denver, Los Angeles and Minneapolis. On August 22 the league was officially named the American Football League.
Two more cities were awarded franchises later in the year - Buffalo (Ralph Wilson) on October 28 and Boston (William H. (Billy) Sullivan) on November 22. The AFL's first draft took place the same day Boston was awarded their franchise. The draft lasted for 33 rounds.
The NFL now offered Hunt what he had originally wanted - an expansion franchise in Dallas. Hunt turned the NFL down, as he felt it would not be right to abandon his fellow AFL owners. Had Hunt left the AFL, it would likely have never played its first game.
On June 9, the league signed a five-year television contract with ABC, which brought in revenues of roughly $2,125,000 per year for the entire league. On June 17, the AFL filed an antitrust lawsuit against the NFL. The suit was dismissed in 1962 after a two-month trial.
The AFL began regular-season play (a night game on Friday, September 9, 1960) with eight teams in the league - the Boston Patriots, Buffalo Bills, Dallas Texans, Denver Broncos, Houston Oilers, Los Angeles Chargers, New York Titans and Oakland Raiders. The Oilers became the first-ever league champions, defeating the Chargers 24-16 in the AFL Championship Game on January 1, 1961.
Attendance for the 1960 season was respectable for a new league, but not nearly that of the NFL. Whereas the more popular NFL teams in 1960 regularly saw attendance figures of 50,000+, AFL attendance generally hovered between 10-20,000 *. With the low attendance came financial losses. The Raiders, for instance, lost $500,000 in their first year. In an early sign of stability, however, the AFL did not lose any teams after its first year of operation. In fact, the only major change was the relocation of the Chargers from Los Angeles to San Diego.
The Titans fared a little better on the field but had their own financial troubles. Attendance was so low for home games that fans were moved to seats closer to the field to give the illusion of a fuller stadium on television. Things got so bad that owner Harry Wisner was unable to meet his payroll, and on November 8, 1962 the AFL took over operations of the team. The Titans were sold to a five-person ownership ground headed by Sonny Werblin on March 28, 1963. Werblin changed the team's name to the New York Jets.
In the December 23, 1962 AFL Championship game, the Dallas Texans dethroned the two-time defending champion Oilers 20-17 in what at that time was professional football's longest game, a double-overtime thriller.
In 1963 the Texans became the second AFL team to relocate. Lamar Hunt felt that despite winning the league championship in 1962, the Texans could not succeed financially in the same market as the Dallas Cowboys (even though the Cowboys weren't nearly as good as the Texans in 1962). After meetings with Atlanta and Miami, Hunt decided on Kansas City as the new home for his team. On May 22 Hunt announced the move, and the team was christened the Kansas City Chiefs on May 26.
A new single-game attendance record was set on November 8, 1964 when 61,929 fans packed Shea Stadium to watch the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills *.
The bidding war between the AFL and NFL for players escalated in 1965. The Chiefs drafted Gale Sayers in the first round of the AFL's 1965 draft, while the Chicago Bears did the same in the NFL draft. Sayers signed with the Bears in a victory for the older league.
A similar situation occurred when the St. Louis Cardinals (NFL) and New York Jets (AFL) both drafted University of Alabama quarterback Joe Namath. But this time the AFL emerged the victor. On January 2, Namath signed a $427,000 contract with the Jets *. It was the highest amount of money ever paid to a collegiate football player. The signing was important not just for the Jets (one of the worst teams in the league) but for the AFL as well.
The AFL expanded to nine teams in 1965 when Minneapolis attorney Joseph Robbie and television star Danny Thomas were awarded a franchise on August 16 for a fee of $7.5 million. Their team, the Miami Dolphins, started play in the AFL's East division in 1966.
On the playing field, the quality of play continued to improve and bona fide stars began to emerge, such as Lance Alworth, George Blanda, Willie Brown, Nick Buoniconti, Ron Mix, and Jim Otto. AFL teams such as the San Diego Chargers, the Kansas City Chiefs, and the Buffalo Bills offered fans exciting games as alternatives to the conservative NFL variety.
1966 saw the rivalry between the AFL and NFL reach an all-time peak. On April 7 Joe Foss, the only commissioner the AFL had ever known, resigned. His chosen successor was Oakland Raiders general manager Al Davis, who had been instrumental in turning around the fortunes of the franchise. No longer content with trying to outbid the NFL for talent, the AFL under Davis actively started to recruit players already on NFL squads. NFL players such as Mike Ditka, Roman Gabriel and John Brodie were offered and/or signed to lucrative AFL contracts.
The same month Davis was named commissioner, Lamar Hunt and Dallas Cowboys owner Tex Schramm held a series of secret meetings in Dallas to discuss their concerns over rapidly increasing player salaries, as well as the practice of player poaching. Hunt and Schramm completed the basic groundwork for a merger by the end of May. On June 8, 1966 the merger was officially announced. Under the terms of the agreement, the two leagues would hold a common player draft. The agreement also called for a title game to be played between the champions of the respective leagues. The two leagues would be fully merged by 1970, and NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle would remain as commissioner of the merged league. The AFL also agreed to pay indemnities of $18 million to the NFL over 20 years. In protest, Davis resigned as AFL commissioner on July 25 rather than remain until the completion of the merger.
On January 15, 1967, the first-ever World Championship Game between the champions of the two separate professional football leagues, the AFL-NFL Championship Game (retroactively referred to as Super Bowl I), was played in Los Angeles. The NFL champion Green Bay Packers overwhelmed the AFL champion Kansas City Chiefs, 35-10.
The Cincinnati Bengals became the second AFL expansion franchise on May 24, 1967. The Bengals were the tenth and final team to begin play as an AFL franchise. In a clear indication of the success of the AFL, Paul Brown paid $10,000,000 for the Bengals franchise–four hundred times more than the original AFL franchise value of $25,000 only eight years earlier.
The Colts, who entered the contest as an 18-point favorite, had completed the 1968 NFL season with a 13-1 record, then won two playoff games, the latter a 34-0 dismantling of the Cleveland Browns. Baltimore's defense was considered one of the finest of its era, having allowed just 144 points in 1968. In contrast, the Jets had allowed 280 points, the highest total for any division winner in the two leagues.
But Jets quarterback Joe Namath seemed unimpressed. Three days before the game, Namath spoke to a group at the Touchdown Club in Miami and declared, "We're going to win Sunday, I'll guarantee you." *
Namath and the Jets made good on his guarantee as they held the Colts scoreless until late in the fourth quarter. The Jets won, 16-7, in what is considered by many to be one of the greatest upsets in American sports history. *
While no doubt shocked by the result, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle nonetheless saw the Jets' victory as a watershed moment that would give a legitimacy to the merger. That feeling was reinforced one year later in Super Bowl IV, when the AFL champion Kansas City Chiefs defeated the NFL champion Minnesota Vikings, 23-7 in the last championship game to be played between the two leagues.
The last contest in AFL history was the AFL All-Star Game on January 17, 1970. The Western All-Stars, led by Chargers quarterback John Hadl, defeated the Eastern All-Stars, 26-3.
Prior to the start of the 1970 NFL season, the merged league was split into two conferences of three divisions each. All ten AFL teams made up the bulk of the new American Football Conference. The old NFL's Baltimore Colts, Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns were also placed in the AFC. All the other existing NFL squads moved to the National Football Conference.
Some AFL fans had wanted the AFL and the NFL to set up a joint organizational structure like Major League Baseball where one entity operates two different sports leagues. Instead, the AFL gave up its name and logo to join the older league. The AFC logo used today has some elements of the old AFL logo. However the "A" in the AFL logo was blue; for unknown reasons, the "A" in the AFC logo is red.
The NFL went on to basically adopt virtually every pioneering aspect introduced by the AFL, including names on player jerseys and revenue sharing of gate and television receipts. The older league also adopted the practice of using the stadium scoreboard clocks to keep track of the official game time, instead of just having a stop watch used by the referee. The AFL also introduced the two-point conversion to professional football thirty-four years before the NFL instituted it in 1994. The AFL's challenge to the NFL also laid the groundwork for the Super Bowl, which has become the standard for championship contests.
Hunt's vision brought a new professional football league not only to California and New York, but to Colorado and later fast-growing Florida, which hosted professional sports for the first time in their histories. The AFL also returned the sport to New England for the first time in 23 years. The AFL also adopted the first-ever cooperative television plan for professional football, in which the league office negotiated an ABC-TV contract, the proceeds of which were divided equally among member clubs.
Four NFL franchises were awarded as a direct result of the AFL's competition with the older league: the Cowboys, who were established solely to drive the AFL Texans out of Dallas; the Vikings, who were awarded to Max Winter in exchange for dropping his bid to join the AFL; the Falcons, whose franchise went to Rankin Smith to dissuade him from purchasing the AFL's Miami Dolphins; and the Saints, because of successful anti-trust legislation supported by several Louisiana politicians, which let the two leagues merge. If the AFL had not existed, it is likely that neither would the Cowboys, Vikings, Falcons, or Saints.
Given the furious battle for playing talent, the AFL's arrival helped many black players from small colleges helped broaden the talent base for players who subsequently contributed to the sport. Foreword by Miller Farr.
The AFL's free agents came from several sources. Some were players who could not find success playing in the NFL, while another source was the Canadian Football League. In the late 1950s, many players released by the NFL, or un-drafted and unsigned out of college by the NFL, went North to try their luck with the CFL, and later returned to the states to play in the AFL.
In the league's first years, men like the Oilers' George Blanda, the Chargers/Bills' Jack Kemp, the Texans' Len Dawson, the Titans' Don Maynard, the Raiders/Patriots/Jets' Babe Parilli, the Pats' Bob Dee proved to be AFL standouts. Other players such as the Broncos' Frank Tripucka, the Pats' Gino Cappelletti, the Bills' Cookie Gilchrist and the Chargers' Tobin Rote, Sam Deluca and Dave Kocourek also made their mark to give the fledgling league badly-needed credibility. Rounding out this mix of potential talent were the true "free agents", the walk-ons and the "wanna-be's", who tried out in droves for the chance to play professional football.
The American Football League took advantage of the burgeoning popularity of football by locating teams in major cities that lacked NFL franchises, and by using the growing power of televised football games (bolstered with the help of major network contracts, first with ABC and later with NBC). It featured many outstanding games, such as the classic 1962 double-overtime American Football League championship game between the Dallas Texans and the defending champion Houston Oilers. At the time it was the longest professional football championship game ever played.
The AFL appealed to fans by offering a flashier alternative to the more conservative NFL. Team uniforms were bright and colorful. Long passes ("bombs") were commonplace in AFL offenses, led by such talented quarterbacks as John Hadl, Daryle Lamonica and Len Dawson.
Another attractive feature of the American Football League was its competitive balance. In the original eight-team league, in a fourteen game schedule, each team played every other team twice. Every team had the same "strength of schedule", so the division champions were clearly the best teams in each division. Further, the league championships were evenly divided: five were won by Western Division teams, five by the Eastern Division; and of the original eight teams, all but two (Denver and Boston) won at least one AFL title, and only one did not make the playoffs at some time during the league's ten-year existence.
Players who chose the AFL to develop their talent included Lance Alworth and Ron Mix of the Chargers, who had also been drafted by the NFL's San Francisco 49ers and Baltimore Colts respectively. Both eventually were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame after earning recognition during their careers as being among the best at their positions. Among specific teams, the 1964 Buffalo Bills stood out by holding their opponents to a pro football record 913 yards rushing on 300 attempts, while also recording fifty quarterback sacks in a fourteen-game schedule.
Despite having a national television contract, the AFL often found itself trying to gain a foothold, only to come up against roadblocks. For example, CBS-TV, which broadcast NFL games, ignored results from the other league.
The bidding war, which was financially draining both leagues, and the rapidly rising popularity of the AFL were factors that eventually led to the merger, leaving a merged league named the NFL.
Eastern Division
Western Division
The eight-team roster enabled the league to set a schedule where every team played every other team twice during the fourteen-game season, as the AAFC did.
The league added a ninth team, the Miami Dolphins, in 1966, and a tenth team, the Cincinnati Bengals in 1968.
From 1960 to 1968, the AFL determined its champion via a single playoff game between the winners of its two divisions. In 1969, a four team tournament was instituted, with the second place teams in each division also participating.
The AFL did not play an All-Star game after its first season in 1960 but did stage All-Star games for the 1961 through 1969 seasons. All-Star teams from the Eastern and Western divisions played each other after every season except 1965. That season, the league champion Buffalo Bills played all-stars from the other teams.
After the 1964 season, the AFL All-Star Game had been scheduled for early 1965 in New Orleans' Tulane Stadium. After numerous black players were refused service by a number of New Orleans hotels and businesses, black and white players alike lobbied for a boycott. Under the leadership of Buffalo Bills players including Carlton Chester "Cookie" Gilchrist, the players put up a unified front, and the game was successfully moved to Houston's Jeppesen Stadium.
The league arose as a result of a contract dispute between Red Grange and his previous team, the National Football League's Chicago Bears. When in 1926 the Bears refused to agree to new terms for Grange's services, his agent, C. C. Pyle, formed a new team, the New York Yankees, around Grange, as part of a new American Football League. The league lasted just one season, and in 1927 the Yankees joined the NFL.*
Roster and Final standings:
The Syracuse Braves moved to Rochester in midseason and disbanded during the season. The Brooklyn Tigers moved to Rochester after the Rochester Braves disbanded.
Champions
Champions
See List of leagues of American football
American Football League | Defunct American football leagues | 1960 establishments | 1970 disestablishments
American Football League | American Football League | American Football League | American Football League | American Football League
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"American Football League".
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